37
Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Astronomy in the new Millenium

Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Page 2: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Formation of the Solar System

Nebular contraction:

Cloud of gas and dust contracts due to gravity; conservation of angular momentum means it spins faster and faster as it contracts

Page 3: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Angular momentum – the tendency of a body to keep spinning.

Conservation of angular momentum

Page 4: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Formation of the Solar System

Condensation theory:

Interstellar dust grains help cool cloud, and act as condensation nuclei

Page 5: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Lets name them (in correct order). Mercury. (0.38 AU from the Sun) Venus. (0.72 AU) Earth. (1.0 AU ≈ 100,000,000 miles) Mars. (1.52 AU) Jupiter. (5.2 AU) Saturn. (9.52 AU) Uranus. (20 AU) Neptune (30 AU)

Page 6: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Planets

Page 7: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Mercury

Page 8: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Mercury’s “cool” features. Mercury is the only planet in the solar

system which has no atmosphere! Mercury rotates very ssslllloooowwwlllyyy.

One day on Mercury equals to 176 Earth days!

Mercury’s day side gets fried by the Sun to the temperatures high enough to melt Lead!

Mercury’s night side gets so cold that oxygen would be liquid there!

Page 9: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Venus

Page 10: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Venus’s surface

Page 11: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

“Cool” Venus features. (HOT actually)

Venus is the hottest planet in the Solar system! (900 oF – twice as hot as your oven can do).

Venus’s atmosphere is 90 time thicker then Earth’s atmosphere!

HOT, Crashing and Orange/Red… And, eh, it is also very sloooooooooow. One

Venus’s day = 243 Earth’s days and it rotates the wrong way!

Page 12: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Any pictures? A photograph of the surface, from the Venera

lander, which did not survive for long though…

Page 13: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Earth

Page 14: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Moon

Page 15: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Visitors

Apollo 11 landing cite – Moon, Sea of Tranquility, July 1969.

Page 16: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Final phase of the total Solar Eclipse: diamond-ring effect

Total Solar eclipse

Solar Eclipse

Page 17: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Mars

We learned SO much about Mars during the last decade!

Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, and Mars orbiter Odyssey are diamonds in our scientific portfolio.

Page 18: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Mars

Page 19: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Mars

Page 20: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Mars’s “cool” facts. (wet actually) A long, long time ago… In a galaxy far, far away…

Page 21: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Mars’s “cool” facts. (wet actually) 1 or 2 billion years ago Mars was covered

with liquid WATER!

Page 22: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

“Cool” facts. (cont.) Mars is home of the

largest mountain in the Solar system – Olympus mons. 25 km high!

Mars has the largest and the deepest canyon in the Solar system – Valles Marineris. It is as big as the entire USA and 7 km deep.

Page 23: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Comets

Page 24: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Gas Giants Gas Giants are … Well, gas giant. They consist almost exclusively of gas,

hydrogen and helium. Lots of gas!

Page 25: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Jupiter

Page 26: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

“Cool” fact about Jupiter Jupiter is the Largest

and the most massive planet in the Solar system.

If it would be just 80 time heavier it would become a star!

Jupiter has storm which is at least 300 years old! (Great Red Spot).

It looks like a zebra.

Page 27: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Jupiter moons

Page 28: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Saturn

Page 29: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Saturn rings

Page 30: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Uranus

Page 31: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Neptune

Page 32: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

What else is out there?

Page 33: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Asteroids

Page 34: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Asteroids Impact of a large asteroid can be VERY unpleasant.

Page 35: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Giant impact

65 millions years agoasteroid impact causedthe Cretaceous extinction

Page 36: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Meteoroid Small rocky object

in space. If burn in the

atmosphere – meteor.

If survived the atmosphere and hits the ground – meteorite.

Page 37: Astronomy in the new Millenium Volker Crede Grigory Rogachev

Grand design